The Children of the Wind Kite Festival
is held on the third Saturday and Sunday in July at
Windy Point on the Old Man River Dam a few kilometers
north east of Pincher Creek, Alberta, Canada. This
is an area just north of Waterton National Park, tucked
in the south west corner of the province, where real
cowboys heard real cows with real horses in the hills
and the valleys at the foot of the Rockies. The locals
don't drive SUV's to the urban lounge to listen to
pop tarts. They are more likely to seed a million
acres of wheat with airplanes, drive trucks, listen
to Garth Brooks and eat beans for breakfast.
This year, Ray Bethel made his regular trek to Pincher.
Ray has been the big draw card every year since the
first Children of the Wind Kite Festival in 1991.
Also appearing this year were Janice and Roger Maddy
with their Kite Puppet Show.
We got out of our campsite early Saturday morning.
(We tented this year as not a hotel, motel, or B&B
was available in the area; Paul Durant from Calgary
tried 4 weeks prior and not a room was available.)
Each morning the festival starts with a "toonie"
breakfast of pancakes and sausages cooked up by the
local fire department.
(Editor’s note: A “toonie” is a
Canadian $2 coin)
As is typical for Pincher, you never know whether
to bring your
ultra-lights or your coastal gale kites. The morning
zero winds kept people on the ground but at about
11:00 AM somebody flipped the switches on the wind
machines and there was too much wind.
Temperatures hovered in the low 30s so water sales
were brisk.
The Sailboarders who come down to use the reservoir
at the Dam had excellent conditions. Unfortunately
the Kiteboarders once again failed to amaze, and mostly
got dragged downwind until they met the rocky beach.
The kite building tent did booming business making
sleds with all of the kids and gave out all of their
kits on the first day. For those with less active
wind aspirations, there were tours of the local wind
powered electrical generation plant (windmills).
Just as Ray came out to do his demonstration flights,
tour busses would roll in to the parking lot and out
would clamber large groups of tourists in their blue
suits and dresses. In a nice orderly line they walked
to the edge of the field, watched Ray fly, walk past
the various display booths, then back to the bus to
continue their tour. Ahhh, Vancouver to Halifax by
bus in 5 days, how good it is to see a whole country
in such a reasonable
time! ;-)
I managed to break all of my kites that day, including
my 6 stick round kite with 50 foot tails that had
split ring failures and shed 2 spars. They came in
from 750 feet but nobody was injured.
Throughout the weekend, photographers from Canadian
Geographic roamed around snapping piccies. No word
as to when anything would be published (I didn't ask)
but you can expect to see some pretty cool pictures
of John Freeman and Ray with their art.
Getting back to our campsite, we found that the high
winds of the day had splintered two sections of our
tent's fiberglass structure. These were promptly repaired
with Avia 2200s and duct tape.
A quick change of clothing and off to the local Swiss
wannabe restaurant for the annual old guard pig-out
and tale swap.
Saturday night, if the wind doesn't halt, sees a
night fly and usually brings a fireworks display,
but due to the extreme fire hazard the fireworks had
to be cancelled.
Time to watch the satellites and shooting stars and
listen to the coyotes howl and get a good night's
sleep.
Sunday morning, tent still standing, time to pack
up and head up for breakie and ... no wind. Oh well,
get set up anyway, 11:00 and it's already 30 degrees...perhaps
a hot air balloon will fly in this...CLICK...hey somebody
turned on the wind machine again, and it's stronger
than yesterday.
I seem to remember that the Rokkaku challenge was
cancelled due to the high winds. This has turned into
the locals’ bragging rights competition. Various
teams are sponsored by the local businesses, they
make their own kites and the battles can be quite
fierce (and at the same time humorous). During the
weeks around festival time, the shops around town
are adorned with kites of all shapes. This is one
community that has adopted kites fully.
John and Marzlie set up a stunning display of banners
and flew their huge works of art. Ray flew his routines
whether there was no wind or gales (with the brain
dead DJ spouting statistics of Ray flying in Italy
in front of 30,000 then 300,000 then 30,000 then 300,000
people). Roger and Janice had everybody amazed with
their Nerd Bird hopping through the crowds.
The Martini flag is hoisted, inviting the old guard
for a sip and a nosh, more good stories and a peruse
of the picture albums.
Late afternoon brings the inevitable goodbyes as
people start making their way back to their jobs,
or off to the rest of their holidays exploring the
parks and mountains, or heading off to the Indy races
in Vancouver.
That's it for now.
Andrei Chichak
Links/Pics:
http://www.bcka.bc.ca/gallery/page28/28-6.jpg
Dave Tuttle and me with my kites a couple of
years back at Sechelt, British Columbia.
http://telusplanet.net/public/wndykids/
http://www.cowleyridge.com/
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